Releases-LPD

The Whispering Wall

THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

May 11, 2004
US CD Roir RUS8286

07 September 2013
NL MP3 self-released on Bandcamp

  1. Soft Toy – [MP3]
  2. A Distant Summer – [MP3]
  3. Dominic [MP3]
  4. In Sickness And In Health – [MP3]
  5. For Sale – [MP3]
  6. King Of A Small World – [MP3]
  7. The Region Beyond – [MP3]
  8. Zero 6 – [MP3]
  9. Peek-a-Boo – [MP3]
  10. The Divide – [MP3]
  11. Sunken Pleasure / Rising Pleasure / No Walls, No Strings – [MP3]

Credits

  • Edward Ka-Spel – Voice, Keyboards
  • The Silverman – Keyboards, Electronics
  • Erik Drost – Guitar
  • Niels van Hoorn – Saxophone, Clarineta
  • Raymond Steeg – Engineer, effects

Notes

Recorded at Studio Lent and Studio Klaverland, January-March 2004.
Klymyzh Plazhda… Sing While You May

From Bandcamp: 2004.The first album featuring Erik on guitar and an absolutely blistering
introduction on the first track . Even so, it was an album plagued with problems including a computer crash , an endless battle to find the right mix for a lot of the songs and a writer’s block for EK at an awkward moment. Oddly the result is a decent album, although with the benefit of hindsight it could have been slimmed down a little to create a more coherent journey. Do note this has NOT been remastered.


Press Release

The Whispering Wall is the Legendary Pink Dots’ latest album & third release on ROIR. The album will coincide with a 35-date North American tour. The Pink Dots know that the future, our man-made future is coming. And it is coming to get us. Whereas 2002’s All The King’s Men relied heavily on lush weighty soundscapes, The Whispering Wall provides Ka-Spel’s poetry more room to flourish. Prophetic lyrics & haunting vocals envelope the listener; each song a continuation of the on-going story the LPD tell– either through whimsical songs about Humpty Dumpty’s travails or frightful anecdotes about a society increasingly dependent on technology yet perilously incapable of doing without it. Please take a listen– it may be the most intriguing story you’ve heard in a very long time– until next time. For the last 25 years, the Legendary Pink Dots have been one of the most consistently innovative and intriguing bands around. Constantly touring on the Continent and in North America, they have produced over 25 records on labels such as Play It Again Sam, Wax Trax, Staalplaat, Caroline, and Soleilmoon USA. Their leader, Edward Ka-Spel, a frequent collaborator with Skinny Puppy, has released albums of his own material and with Tear Garden (members of Skinny Puppy). Their unusual mixture of psychedelic whimsy, industrial gloom, and Alice In Wonderland textural madness has made them a constant presence on the innovative fringes of the cult music scene. Their dedication to the road and their inimitable style has earned them a near universal respect from critics and peers. –Roir


Reviews

The Legendary Pink Dots seem unaware or unconcerned about the unwritten record industry rule that discourages artists from releasing multiple albums simultaneously. The proverbial wisdom has it that multiple releases confuse the record-buying public, and the albums tend to cannabilize each other’s sales. Multiple albums have ruined a multitude of bands, from the Incredible String Band all the way to Kiss and Guns N’ Roses. Well, the Pink Dots have been ignoring that maxim for quite a while now. In fact, Pink Dots albums tend to come it two and threes, often with a few solo albums thrown in for good measure. No exception here, as this month brings three new Pink Dots releases, in addition to a new Ka-Spel solo album.Everything is being released on the eve of their North American tour, which takes them through far more US cities than any other underground British/Dutch post-industrial psychedelic art-goth group could even dream of visiting. The extensive touring may be the secret to the Pink Dots impressive longevity and endurance, as they are frequently one of the most critically ignored bands in the underground scene. The Whispering Wall isn’t going to rectify this situation, a typically indigestible concoction of psychedelic whimsy, wildly experimental textures, densely prophetic lyrical themes and skewed songwriting all mixed up together in a gooey prog-rock quagmire. Evaluating its relative quality compared to other albums is almost a moot point, as most hardcore Dots fans will certainly want to own every album regardless, and others stopped caring 30 albums ago.That said, The Whispering Wall does have some brilliant moments, and is very cohesive, easily eclipsing 2002’s double feature of All The King’s Horses and All The King’s Men, albums that had strong points, but would have been better whittled down to a single disc. Those albums saw the band in a transitional period, finding their footing after the departure of Ryan Moore, trying out a more intimate, stripped-down sound that became tiresome after a few listens. This time around, there’s been a few more personnel changes — the loss of guitarist/violinist Martijn de Kleer and the addition of guitarist Erik Drost — but the Pink Dots have come out intact and smelling (and sounding) like a bouquet of atomic roses. All the familiar Dots elements are present on The Whispering Wall. There’s a good bit of future-scare dystopian proselytizing (“Soft Toy”); a sinister riff on a nursery rhyme (“Dominic”); a slow-cooked instrumental (“The Region Beyond”); the ubiquitous spoken-word EKS narrative against a backdrop of densely layered noise and sound effects (“The Divide”); and just plain demented silliness (“King of a Small World”). The soupy production by Dots mainstay Raymond Steeg is typically heavy-handed (in a good way, lots of sonic detail), and each player is given time to shine: Silverman’s expertly-wielded synthesizers and rhythm programming, Niels Van Hoorn’s exquisite saxophone blasts and Erik Drost’s gutsy swathes of shredding psych guitar are all variously highlighted in the mix. It’s an accomplished album by a prolific band who continue to prove that although less is certainly more, more can also be more. – Jonathan Dean, Brainwashed

 


Lyrics

 

Soft Toy

I’ll not let them touch you dear, it’s a wicked world out there
Crawl inside my pocket, dear, we’ll hide behind the chair
Ten floors up, the chain is strong
The phone’s unplugged, the TV’s on and blasting
If it gets too much, I shall change the channel

Lie back, feel secure, my dear
I’m always right behind you
Should you tremble, should you quake,
These ropes are here to bind you
Hide your eyes, mute your screams,
It isn’t real, they’re only actors playing out our darkest dreams

Each day’s a rerun of the last one, the bad guys never win
Let’s order in, let’s keep it cozy
Give you anything…

I said anything…
I’m your soft toy.

 

A Distant Summer

A discontented winter, an unprecedented fall
Broken spring, she pawned her ring
One steamy summer night in ’64

See, he left without a warning
He did not leave a note
We trolled the river, drained the moat
Could not find him

And the neighbor screamed blue murder
Which was such a bitter pill
Still she swallowed it with dignity
And handed us the key to her domain

Such a shame about the garden
And the posse in the hall
We drank her coffee, knocked down walls, finding nothing…

And they sat around her table
Calling voices from beyond
Spectors moaned, a dancing bone murmured “woooooh”…

 

Dominic

Let’s make an omelette out of Egghead
Beat him hard until he’s stiff
Spill the oil and flip him over
Boil him, push him through the sieve
Maybe sit him on the wall…
A sad mistake— we knew he’d fall

All the horses, all the men tried hard, could not repair him

Here inside this egg-world
I take on another shape
A shell that breaks just means a new horizon…
Piece of cake
See me rising in your lava lamp and set upon the hill
The amber nectar, yellow peril
Perched upon your windowsill
Dripping… dozing… humming…
I whistle as I work

Dripping… dripping…
Watch out world— I’m turning nova

 

In Sickness and In Health

Keep the curtains closed
Before the lights turn low
Trust the contents of your plate are perfect
I’ll serve it with a smile

Now I’ll light a candle
Guide you through the gate with flowers, with style

Every Sunday, I will kneel
I will swear was for the greater good— the bigger picture
I’ll reveal your words, your figures
They’re engraved upon my heart
Your truth will linger like your…
When your… when your ashes are just dust
You might (???)

Say it again— I need my shot, I need to fly
I’m stretching, but I’m frightened
Say it for me one more time

These arms are here to hold you
These arms are not for sale
These arms are here to fold you, keep you warm
You’ll never fly away

These arms are here to hold you
These arms are not for sale
These arms are here to fold you, keep you warm
And never, ever, ever…

 

For Sale

I insist you will not buy me, even if you really try
I’m set in stone, decided
We have a pact
Don’t turn your back…

“Stand up for yourself,” you said
“Don’t lose your precious pride.”
In sickness, in health
We have a pact
Don’t turn your back…

 

King of a Small World

Sad willow lost the will to weep
And bow to dying swan
Touching ninety, midnight, mid-July
We’re crouching by the pond
Taking shots at those unwary
Taking shots at piles of cans
Don’t you smear my face paint, honey
Keep that shaky hand pressed to your mouth

Out here we’re on our own
And yeah, we’re probably surrounded
Could call it quits right now
And simply throw the bloody towel in
Heads hung low, hands in the air
I’m sorry… hell, I’m sorry
And when they least expect it
We shall take ’em in a blaze of glory

See the future, see the chalk lines in our last embrace
We’ll take you home, we’ll light your path…
Make my day

 

The Region Beyond

 

Zero 6

 

Peek-a-Boo

 

The Divide

 

Sunken Pleasure / Rising Pleasure / No Walls, No Strings

 

Live at Paradiso- Amsterdam, the Netherlands, 1986-01-07

THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

2005
MP3 DE Edition Aurinia e. K.

  1. Unknown Soldier, Foreign Land
  2. Echo Police
  3. A Spanish Bridge
  4. The Heretic
  5. (bridge)
  6. City Ghosts
  7. Premonition 16
  8. I’m the Way the Truth the Light
  9. This Could Be the End
  10. (bridge)
  11. The Hill
  12. The Lovers Part II
  13. (tuning)
  14. The Jungle
  15. Plague 2
  16. Silverture/Flowers for the Silverman

Credits

Edward Ka-Spel


Notes
 
Recorded At – Paradiso Amsterdam. Offered as free download from The Official Live Archive of the Legendary Pink Dots, which is no longer.

A Dream is a Dream is a Dream

THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

2005
US DVD Beta-Lactam Ring Records  MT101

  1. Dream Intro / Curious Guy
  2. The Plasma Twins
  3. Premonition 16/She said
  4. The Hill
  5. Echo Police
  6. Rattlesnake Arena
  7. Poppy Day
  8. The Jewel In The Crown
  9. Our Lady In Chambers
  10. Guardians Of Eden
  11. The Dairy
  12. Neon Gladiators
  13. Love Puppets
  14. The Heretic
  15. I Am The Way, The Truth, The Light
  16. Silverture / Flowers For The Silverman

Credits

  • Edward Ka-Spel – vocals
  • Stret Majest – guitar
  • The Silverman – keyboards
  • Jason Salmon – bass
  • Graham Whitehead – keyboards
  • Patrick Q Wright – violin

Notes

Region free NTSC DVD recorded live at De Vrije Vloer in Utrecht, Holland, on January 21,1987 featuring the orginal 6 piece line up. First 1000 DVD’s are in a 6 color gatefold wallet.

A special thanks to Freek Kinkelaar for preserving this early video document of the LPD’s six-piece line up, and for the concert photo’s used in the cover design.

 

Alchemical Playschool

THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

2006
US CD Caciocavallo CAD32

2007
2×10″ LP Caciocavallo CAL32 (alternate cover)

18 March 2013
MP3 self-released on Bandcamp

  1. Part One – [MP3]
  2. Part Two – [MP3]
  3. Part Three – [MP3]
  4. Part Four – [MP3]

Credits

  • Edward Ka-Spel – Voice, circuit bent flower
  • The Silverman – Keyboards, Electronics
  • Raymond Steeg – sound wizardry
  • Charles Powne- soundscapes from India

Notes

Based on the double CD of field recordings “Indian Soundscapes” released in 2004 by Soleilmoon.
CD: limited to 400 copies packaged in a cloth bag inside a soap stone box with trident symbol eteched into the stone.
LP: 2×10″ limited to 250 copies, presented in a deluxe silkscreened gatefold folder made of recycled sugarcane fiber, with a full-color 9.5 x 20 inch (24 x 51 cm) poster, and each record is stored in its own hand-made marigold flower petal-infused, plastic lined sleeve.

***

From Bandcamp: Could there be a more satisfying project for The Dots than “Alchemical Playschool?”
The concept was devised by Old friend and collaborator Charles Powne at Soleilmoon Records who became besotted by the sub-continent of India around a decade ago.
In fact he wanted to share his experiences and recorded the environment almost wherever he went.These recordings were made available on the fascinating “Indian Soundscapes” double cd on Soleilmoon.
Even so, he still wanted to go a step further and that’s where the Dots’ came in.He asked us to provide musical soundscapes ,using his field recordings as a source.
We did our best. All manner of instrumentation came into play- most notably on Part 1 with the circuit bent flower, which was made for EK by a genius friend in San Francisco named Tom Koch (Univac).
It took a few months to make the music, and longer to make the package- a handmade soapstone box which had to be shipped from India- almost impossibly fragile and extremely beautiful.
2,000 were made but it’s now long out-of-print, although the more regular reissue is a small delight in it’s own right.
No remaster necessary for this one. –E K-S


Press Release

“Alchemical Playschool” is easily one of the most unusual Legendary Pink Dots albums ever released. Based on the LP and double CD “Indian Soundscapes” (Soleilmoon SOL 114/SOL 114 CD), these recordings are best enjoyed with a cold glass of Bhang Ki Thandai, following which the operation of heavy equipment or motor vehicles is strongly discouraged. Yes, this a trippy, psychedelic album, in the tradition of earlier “Chemical Playschool” albums, but it’s been dusted with magical powders from The Orient, making it an altogether different experience from its predecessors. As experimental and esoteric works go, this is the band’s definitive work. The album was conceived at the end of the the Dots’ 2004 North American tour. Edward Ka-Spel met with Soleilmoon owner Charles Powne, who had recently returned from a stay in India. Charles gave Edward a copy of his “Indian Soundscapes” 2xCD, and invited him to take the material and use it in a new Dots recording. The resulting music borrows lightly from the source material, deftly blends it with the band’s signature electronic wizardry, and distills a potent brew redolent with the aromas of saffron, cardamom and flowers. We think you’ll find it both irresistable and unforgettable. The first edition of “Alchemical Playschool” was released on May 8, 2006, as a CD box set limited to 400 copies. It sold out in a matter of weeks. This vinyl edition, limited to 250 copies, is presented in a deluxe silkscreened gatefold folder made of recycled sugarcane fiber, with a full-color 9.5 x 20 inch (24 x 51 cm) poster, and each record is stored in its own hand-made marigold flower petal-infused, plastic lined sleeve. While Soleilmoon is famous (or infamous?) for unique packaging and high quality presentation, this album stands above the rest. The audio content, however, is identical to the CD edition, so no one should feel compelled to purchase this record unless they love vinyl as much as we do!

 


Reviews

East Indian soundscapes meet noisy experimentalism, but the extravagant packaging ensures only diehard fans will hear this. The most obvious aspect of the latest Legendary Pink Dots release is the package it comes in: a hinged box of imported soapstone with the band’s logo hand-carved on the front. It’s exquisite, but its fragile and expensive nature pushes it right out of the price range of all but the most fervent Dots fans. This is too bad, because Alchemical Playschool is easily one of the most distinguished of the band’s more noise-oriented recordings. Crafted in part from the Indian Soundscapes collection of field recordings issued by Soleilmoon, it’s reminiscent of Nurse With Wound’s Shipwreck Radio project, with the sweaty bustling streets of central Asia standing in for the cold tranquility of the northern European fishing village. Divided into four parts, it incorporates such city sounds as ringing telephones and rain on dirt roads, as well as a number of snippets of street music, ranging from the cacophonous squeal of bagpipes on Part One to the more soothing ragas and chants of Parts Three and Four, respectively. Part Two is most recognizable as a Dots recording, with vocalist Edward Ka-Spel delivering spoken word over nervewracking electronic buzzing, but still evokes India: the spoken word comes from the Kama Sutra (it’s less salacious than it sounds; the passage in question concerns the qualities a man should avoid in a prospective bride). The Dots aesthetic pervades the rest of the album in a subtler ways, but it’s still apparent in the playful but somehow disquieting use of manipulated speech, samples, and vintage analog synthesizers. The Indian atmosphere is what makes this unique though, and even more casual Dots fans who might feel overwhelmed by the sheer volume of the band’s output are encouraged to seek this out. Soleilmoon has indicated plans to issue a less extravagant edition in the future; hopefully this will happen sooner rather than later, as this is one of the most interesting forays into sound manipulation the Dots have recorded. – Matthew Johnson, Regen

***

Perhaps the press text says it all: “The audio content, however, is identical to the CD edition, so no one should feel compelled to purchase this record unless they love vinyl as much as we do!”. I like vinyl, but overlooking my castle, I realize I don’t have enough space for vinyl, so when it comes to preferring one or the other, I opt for the CD version. But both the CD version and the double 10″ version look great. The stone soap box versus the handmade paper (“deluxe silkscreened gatefold folder mae of recycled sugarcane fiber, with a full color poster, and each record is stored in its own hand-made marigold flower petal-infused, plastic lines sleeve” mind you). As for the music, not different than before, we return to Vital Weekly 529, when Freek Kinkelaar wrote (wrongly credited to me actually): “Alchemical Playschool is an altogether different beast. It comes packed in a beautiful trident-carved soapstone box that weighs a ton. Here the Dots-core of Edward Kaspel and Phil Knight rework environmental sound-material recorded in India (by Charles Powne of Soleilmoon records, the original recordings are available on CD as Indian Soundscapes). In doing so the Dots create a beautiful dreamscape. The four long tracks (parts one to four) evoke scenes of the East with street sounds, crowd noises, voices and field recordings drifting in and out. At times the results are pastoral and on other occasions downright hectic – just as you’d imagine India to sound like. Part Four, with its beautiful voice sample and washes of sound, forms the highlight of this fascinating album. Alchemical Playschool is welcome proof that the Dots are still willing and able to create exiting experimental music.” Quite right there. At 250 copies a certified pre-programmed collectors item. – Frans de Waard, Vital Weekly

Legacy

THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

2006
DE 7″ Some Fine Legacy SFL004

13 May 2014
self released on Bandcamp

  1. Legacy (1981)
  2. Legacy (2006)

 


Credits

Side “A”

  • EK: voice
  • Michael Marshall: keys,guitar (he in fact composed the music for “Legacy”)
  • Roland Callaway: bass guitar.

Side “B”

  • EK: voice,devices
  • The Silverman: keys,devices,tapes.

Thanks to Marc Milhounic for the fact that this single exists and Papiro who designed the cover.


Notes

Numbered edition of 500 copies only available during the 25th anniversary tour of the Legendary Pink Dots in 2006.

***

When the Pink Dots reached the age of 25, a friend (Marc Milhounic) who had been there from the beginning decided to mark the occasion.

A few years before he had started a label which took it’s name from a line in one of the Dots’ earliest songs- “Some Fine Legacy”.  Consequently the Dots dedicated the “A’ side of this 7” single to the first rendition of “Legacy”(1981) which can be found on the “Chemical Playschool 1/2” double cassette release.

Side 2 of the single sees the song reinvented as a collage / radioplay , 25 years later and painfully world-weary. Here it is for your delectation.

 

Your Children Placate You from Premature Graves

THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

May 2006
US CD Roir RUS8299
07 September 2013
self released on Bandcamp (not remastered)
  1. Count on Me – [MP3]
  2. No Matter What You Do – [MP3]
  3. Stigmata Part 4 – [MP3]
  4. Please Don’t Get Me Wrong – [MP3]
  5. Feathers At Dawn – [MP3]
  6. Peace Of Mind – [MP3]
  7. Island Of Our Dreams – [MP3]
  8. Bad Hair – [MP3]
  9. The Made Man’s Manifesto – [MP3]
  10. A Silver Thread – [MP3]
  11. Your Number’s Up – [MP3]

 


Credits

  • Edward Ka-Spel – Voice, Keyboards
  • The Silverman – Keyboards, Electronics
  • Martijn De Kleer – Guitar, Bass, Drums
  • Niels van Hoorn – Saxophone, Flute
  • Raymond Steeg – Producer, Mastered By

With thanks to: Alena, Astrid, Charles, Chris, Jon, Lisa and Lucas.
Recorded at Studios Lent, Limburgia and Vondel, January to March 2006.
Sing while you may… krezhtazna 459459…


Press release 

Your Children Placate You From Premature Graves is The Legendary Pink Dots’ 25th anniversary album (and in the running for best album title ever). It’s hard to believe a quarter century has passed since the Pink Dots first unearthed their complex vision where fate and whimsy cast stones at each other on some hazy, polluted playground. LPD’s unusual legacy of psychedelia, industrial gloom, and textural madness has made them a constant presence on the innovative fringes of cult music, and has earned them near-universal respect from critics and peers. It was this legacy that shaped much of the album:

The actual theme of “legacy”, “the consequence of past and present action on the future”, has consciously informed much of this release. In some ways, it’s been a central-core-theme of all our songwriting these last 25 years. -Phil ‘The Silverman’ Knight

Twenty-five years later, the Dots have hardly paused for a breath. Edward Ka-Spel, The Silverman and company (Niels Van Hoornblower, Raymond Steeg & returning member Martijn de Kleer), still make boundlessly weird, beautifully disturbing music.

This is an album about mortality & immortality, about time ticking away mercilessly, about seizing the moment and damning the consequences. Your victims are lining up on both sides of the corridor, unborn yet forgiving. We are all pitifully human and we all want to take everything with us at the end, but there is no end…just a darkening endless horizon… -Edward Ka-Spel

In addition to the 25th anniversary album, the Dots will embark on a massive North American tour this June to celebrate this landmark occasion. Then they’ll disappear into the ether…until their next haunting. -ROIR


Reviews

Faux spookiness of the Count Floyd/Count Chocula variety is everywhere; just turn on MTV2, or head to your local counterculture shlock shop for a dose of unintentionally hilarious “goth” aesthetics. But for 25 years, the London-via-Amsterdam band Legendary Pink Dots have proffered a rarer, truer kind of darkness. Your Children Placate You from Premature Graves–which is approximately the band’s 28th, or 46th release, depending on whether you count live albums and EPs–is subtly, eclectically and actually disturbing. On “No Matter What You Do” unfussy singer Edward Ka-Spel chews on religion’s snagging edges–“Jesus loves the little children, even when they torch the cat”–over spacey Anglo-dub and storms of feedback. “Stigmata, Pt. 4” dredges up a palpably suicidal atmosphere from a slow piano ditty, synth whirls and vocals that constantly shift proximity in the mix–whispering in your ear one second, then talking over the phone, then from the other end of the room–like a manic conscience. Over 11 tracks, there’s avant-jazz, midtempo industrial, Bedouin horns, melancholy Syd Barrett-ish folk and inert electro-pop recalling late-’80s Wire. The sum total is something creepier, and richer, than anything with black mascara. – Andrew Marcus, Dallas Observer

***

“Since 1980, LPD have created some of the most enigmatic and challenging compositions in modern music. The uniqueness of their work is due in large part to its omnivorous ability to consume and transform a variety of styles into a new, cohesive entity. The introverted folk of Nick Drake may be found here, as well as the graphic cyberpunk nightmares of Frank Tovey (Fad Gadget), not to mention the rhythmic permutations of Philip Glass. From Beefheart to Brahms, the sources of LPD’s quicksilver soundscapes are myriad. What holds them all together is Ka-Spel’s dense lyricism and grim obsessions.” -ROLLING STONE

***

“Proceeding out of a hodgepodge of gloomy/fringey/hippie antecedents–Joy Division, Syd Barrett, Faust, etc.–but adding a classical sensibility, involuted mythology, found-sound sampling weirdness, plus all sorts of stylistic cross-mingling and experimentation, Edward Ka- Spel (vocals, lyrics, keyboards), Phil Knights (aka The Silver Man; keyboards) and a shifting collection of associates have turned the Legendary Pink Dots into an open-ended adventure. Although certainly prone to enigmatic risk-taking, the enormously resourceful LPD is a mellifluous and dynamically restrained proposition: this is one dip into the rock netherworld that won’t send you running for cover. The lyrics, however–a disturbing onslaught of doom, violence and apocalypse–are a different story.” -TROUSER PRESS

***

The Dots’ music is as difficult to describe as it is enjoyable and moving to hear. Yes, they thrive on psychedelic industrogroove dabbed and fringed with experimentation; yes, the irrepressible Edward Kah-spell’s lyrics can be dark, mystical, deeply and hauntingly personal in detailing the most intimate moments and the emotions underpinning them. None of this speaks to the stark simplicity that defines the band’s 25-year legacy. No matter how intricate or complex the sound world gets at any moment, a few scraps of melody keeps everything grounded, a repeated rhythm anchors two or three broken chords. The Residents achieved this. It was also a Kraftwerk trademark. But the Dots have now taken the aesthetic to the next level.

Your Children Placate You from Premature Graves is the group’s 25th anniversary album, and it certainly captures all the weirdness, darkness and playfulness that have graced its daunting discography. Yet, there is a refinement of texture and sound manipulation evident here that I only appreciated fully after experiencing the disc on headphones. “Stigmata Part 4” bubbles with life far below the surface, distant voices and other nameless things coloring the spaces between chords and Kah-spell’s dangerously compassionate whispers. “A Silver Thread” is all repetitive sub-bass muscle against slithery saxophone, the two components threatening to tear each other apart as the musique concrete ventures of earlier albums become more integral parts of the song structures.

Lyrically, strides have also been made; themes from the 9/11-inspired king’s horses/king’s men diptych resurface in “Don’t Get Me Wrong,” where the dual perspectives of a foreigner and what might be a Guantanamo Bay prisoner are filtered through vaguely but appropriately “ethnic” sound sculpture. Kah-spell, always erring on the bizarrely aphoristic side, outdoes himself with the disc’s opening line: “Jesus loves the little children, even when they torch the cat.” Then though, there is the hypnotic and heartbreaking “Bad Hair”:

Will you stand next to me,
Will you cast nets for me,
Flying through space,
Or falling from grace, …

Similarly far-reaching and personally simplistic lines pervade the track, all set against a lush but transparent multi-pulse of guitars and subtle electronics. If this is not the Dots’ best album, it’s in my top five, and that’s no mean feat for a group that has released consistently interesting and provocative material over the last 25 years. Here’s to 25 more. – Marc Medwin, Dusted

***

The Legendary Pink Dots, active since 1980, are a band that defies explanation. Their compositions are strange, weird…folk like, experimental and daring. As they embark on their 25th anniversary tour this year, which will include the return of Martijn de Kleer, their latest release, Your Children Placate You From Premature Graves, is disturbing and dark and echoes the state of the planet that, if you ask me, is on the very brink of disaster.

Using elemental electronics with loping movements of bass and rhythm, combining that with nightmarish spoken vocals and the occasional stabs of horns, No Matter What You Do on track two takes us further into a desperate nightmare. Stigmata (Part 4) gives us a light tinkling piano tune, a breather from the previous darker edge. The light, chanting reading is touched with desperation, but never strays too far into the murky depths, staying on the very cliff of sanity looking off into the abyss of madness. Feathers at Dawn is a cute little tune with flamenco, Spanish influenced guitar and light male vocals. Its hoppy style at its onset and within is almost cute inside the surrounding album. Please Don’t Get Me Wrong is a party in a Tupperware factory with Ali Baba as the chief guest. The Island of Our Dreams is surprisingly sweet, but the backing electronic dirges sets a stage of weirdness just beyond the otherwise nicey nice vocals and guitar. Songs like Bad Hair are similar, in that the Dots tread on the waters of insanity but never deluge you. The Made Man’s Manifesto has a vocal quality that is kind of leery and strange, but somehow inviting. Nearly done now, A Silver Thread is a foreboding horn and wind ensemble, jazzlike.

The Legendary Pink Dots have always astounded people with their weirdness. Compared to everything from Skinny Puppy to Coil, They Might Be Giants and more, their folk influence is apparent but they’ll mix in surprising electronics, unexpected experiments and interesting bits of out of place sounds. For anyone looking for something a little more strange for their nightly candlelight vigils, Your Children Placate You From Premature Graves will fit that bill brilliantly. – Marcus Pan, Legends

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2006 marks the quarter century mark for one of the world’s most enduring musical enigmas: The Legendary Pink Dots. The twists, contortions, and genre gyrations the band have traversed over this period are dizzying and often occur in the absence of any grand plan or master philosophy save perhaps that of relentless experimentation within broad pop structures. For this year’s offering, LPD have created a characteristically lushly grim song cycle that both looks simultaneously forward with themes of mortality (the final track is ominously entitled “Your Time Is Up”) and immortality and backwards with a mind to trying to organize the scattershot travels of the last twenty five years into a consistent whole. The irony of assembling a coherent legacy for a band whose badge of honor has been to follow loose threads wherever they took them rather than impose some type of top-down organization should not be lost on anyone, least of all LPD themselves. On Your Children… they let the music and lyrics wander in a leisurely stroll through their eclectic garden. As usual, LPD operates from multiple centers of strength at once. The first is Edward Ka-Spel’s carefully constructed and delightfully oblique lyrics. Ka-Spel’s by now familiar themes of guilt, alienation, self-doubt, and other forms of social discomfort are densely packed bombs that blossom in the back of your mind. Ka-Spel is a keen observer of human flaws and these are explored both in the context of bewildering divine forgiveness of horrible transgressions (“No Matter What you Do”) and in the more personal spheres of betrayal (“The Island Of Our Dreams”) and neglect (“Bad Hair”). The cruel vagaries of fate often take center stage. In the exemplary “Please Don’t Get Me Wrong”, a tourist ends up in an unnamed Middle Eastern jail for a crime that is never divulged, even to her. Claustrophobic in both its lyrics and arrangement, it is a harrowing journey from a mundane girl’s night out to a hellish arrest and imprisonment. The resulting montage hearkens back to the band’s long form experimentation in their “Chemical Playschool” series. Ka-Spel deftly transposes the grim details of his story onto a larger canvas; the upcoming “trial” is an apt, if mildly Kafka-esque, metaphor for that final interview to enter the pearly gates. When the song creaks to its end in a repeated mantra of “you have no choice”, it is a spine chilling reminder of the futility of resistance in the face of invisible authority. Musically, LPD navigates waters of synthetic minimalism and full-on rave-up robo-groove with equal assurance, often in the same song (e.g. “The Made Man’s Manifesto”). There’s no sense that any of the songs themselves or the flow of the album in general hew to any pat structure. The gorgeous multi-tracked saxophone intro to the episodic “A Silver Thread” has to contend with spectral shimmers of synthesizer and cymbals to assert its beauty. The fact that it ultimately is swallowed by a sinister cloud of electronics by the middle of the song should not be construed as defeat either. LPD thrives on documenting those brief moments of gorgeous peace that can exist against the most tumultuous of backgrounds. When Ka-Spel’s spoken word vocals finally tell their lonely tale of a depressive’s battle against the all-consuming weight of his malaise, it becomes obvious that this “silver thread” could be all that is connecting him to life itself; it is his mortal coil. Lest one come away with the impression that Your Children… is unrelentingly grim, there is the wonderful flowing entwined bass and sax of “No Matter What You Do”, or “Feathers At Dawn”‘s jaunty guitar strum, tuba and violin (what an arrangement!) melting into a simmering flamenco vamp. Joy and sorrow both have a place at the table. Newcomers to LPD are probably not going to be won over primarily on the strength of this release, but then trying to pin down this band based on one release is akin to reducing a complex organism to a single cell. Sure, the DNA may be present in the cell, but it certainly doesn’t give a complete picture. LPD has been accused of lack of focus in individual releases, but Your Children… does not suffer from that fate. It does what a proper summation should do: it presents a well-formed “state of the band” document while generating enough interest for novices to seek out the genesis of the ideas presented and keeping the fan base enthralled, waiting in rapt attention for the next chapter. – Steve Rybicki, Fake Jazz

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The Dots have always been good at exploring the liminal borderlands between structure and abstraction, between dream and waking life, between nightmare and whimsy. The band’s music always has one foot resting on each side, and they are not afraid to dance for extended periods on one side or the other. This album seems to synthesize a lot of the band’s previous approaches: crepuscular nightmare monologues, extended noise jams, chugging electronics, twisted fairy tales, orchestral passages, surrealistic cut-up sequences and druggy excursions into nebulous Qlippothic realms.

Your Children Placate You From Early Graves sounds like a classic LPD album right from the start, with the atmospheric opener “Count On Me;” the sound of a jeering mob serves as a foil for Silverman’s reverberating piano prelude; and a dialogue snippet of a helpful therapist asking: “Did you suffer nightmares? Are you able to tell us what it is you have nightmares about?” This brief track segues into the first proper track on the album, “No Matter What You Do,” a typically indescribable Pink Dots rock hybrid: hash-filtered dub beats, blankets of noise guitar, layers of synthesized drones and chirping electronic effects, Ka-Spel’s heavily processed vocal mantra: “We are so unworthy of his endless mercy.” Then it’s into heavy prog territory, everything combining into a warm, atmospheric fog of dense psychedelic texture, Niels Van Hoorn’s trademark saxophone crying out in the chaos, carving out lines in the thick loam that are quickly swallowed up in the maelstrom.

Your Children has the advantage of being relatively economical in length, and being the only album of new material being released before the tour. Past years have seen the group spreading themselves a bit thin, with two new albums being released simultaneously, often with a couple Ka-Spel solo albums thrown in for good measure. By concentrating on creating nine substantive, well-written and dynamic Dots songs, the group benefits tremendously, and there is nary a wasted moment on the album.

Ka-Spel tackles a lot of familiar lyrical themes: questions of faith, freedom, war and destiny in the postmodern age of alienation. The album’s title seems to suggest a heavy political bent, and this is not a red herring. On “Please Don’t Get Me Wrong,” for instance, Middle Eastern troubles are extra-geographically evoked with Arabic and Indian flavored psychedelia, Ka-Spel’s lyrics narrating a frightening tale of military arrest and summary execution, punctuated with the repeated phrase “You have no choice,” which bounces around the stereo channels exactly like the middle section of 10CC’s “I’m Not in Love.” This leads directly into “Peace of Mind,” which seems to be a direct continuation of the previous song, with Ka-Spel’s futile hopes for a peaceful resolution once again taking the political and making it all too personal.

There are some surprising moments on the album, like the theremin solo which comes out of nowhere on the whimsical “Feathers At Dawn,” or the moment when the beautiful psych-folk of “The Island of our Dreams” suddenly fades out into eerie inorganic drones. The de rigeur ambient noise and spoken-word track makes it appearance here with “A Silver Thread,” which begins in Lynchian territory, hypnotic mutations and overdubs of Van Hoorn’s sultry saxophone weaving through dark, ominous alleyways of Alan Splet-esque drones and low-end electronic shudders, distorted voices, rain-slicked city streets and passing sirens. Towards the end of the track, Ka-Spel chimes in with a sardonic monologue that is both sullen and hilarious: “Out of body, but I don’t like what I see/Find it hard to take what I hover above/And a little voice says that I should get out more/Maybe pick up some DVDs from the library and cry with the stars discreetly in my own surroundings/Pick the scene that moves me the most and play it again and again.”

Playing my most beloved LPD albums for various friends and lovers over the years, I’ve learned the hard way that some people will just never warm up to the Dots. There’s something about the band’s amiguous and amorphous musical style, or Ka-Spel’s peculiar accent and vocal delivery, or the band’s willful eclecticism, or the perceived associations with underground gothic rock, or those who fear anything even hinting at progressive rock, or maybe something else entirely makes it impossible for LPD to penetrate beyond their loyal and bizarrely heterogeneous cult following. I can only speculate as to the reasons why they don’t strike a chord with others, because I have always loved their music, and count a few of their albums as among my favorites of all time. Listening to the penultimate track on Your Children, “The Made Man’s Manifesto,” I was suddenly filled with memories of countless Dots shows past, late-night lava-lamp-lit listening sessions, the thrill of cracking open new LPD and EKS albums over the years, and the strange admixture of the predictably nostalgic and the wholly new that each successive album never fails to provide. – Jonathan Dean, Brainwashed